THESE ARE SOME OF THE KIDS WE HELP
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P.E.A.C.E. is a grassroots effort with much of their previous work focused on confronting the commercial sexual exploitation of children. Because they have worked for years in the affected communities (beach squatter settlements) and have established these centers for helping vulnerable children, they are in an excellent position to help respond with aid for the Tsunami victims.
P.E.A.C.E.'s primary goal is to provide education for impoverished children from urban slums and rural squatter settlements. P.E.A.C.E. is based in Sri Lanka, an extremely impoverished country where approximately 60% of the population lives below the poverty line.
What we need:
Soap
Antibiotics
Cough Syrup
Vitamin C Tablets
Vitamins
Cologne
Betadine Lotion and Ointment
Bandages
Towels
Mats/Sheets (cotton)
Pillows
Water (Drinking)
Clothing for children 8 to 18 years
Women's clothing.
Shipping Address:
If you want to ship to P.E.A.C.E. - please contact us at
PeaceBuilder07@aol.com
and we will assist with the shipping costs.
Maureen Seneviratne
P.E.A.C.E.
455 Thimbirigasyaya Road
Colombo 5,
Sri Lanka
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27th December
2004
Dear All,
By now the news of the terrible disaster that hit South and
South East Asia on Sunday, 26th December 2004 has no doubt reached
you all. We can only say that it has been devastating. "Sri
Lanka Worst Hit" is the CNN headline.
For P.E.A.C.E. personally, all I can say is that every beach
programme from Colombo City to 15 kilometres down the West Coast
where we work intensively, is totally affected. Every single
one of the squatter settlements were swept away by sea waves
at least 10 feet high entering the land. In the North of Colombo
the Colombo 13, 14 and 15 areas where we also work, have been
battered by sea floods. All the people in the programmes in
the South who have not been lost are herded together in school
rooms and church halls, in the upper reaches of the suburbs.
The mothers, the children, the youth in the P.E.A.C.E. programmes
are homeless and hungry. They were poor anyhow. Their clothes
and belongings are washed away by the sea-waves.
We are trying to do our best to cope with the hundreds of families
and we can do so little to give them relief. All of them are
homeless, I mean those who were living in the beach squatter
settlements almost on the edge of the sea. Most of them took
the first wave.
Thank you for all your efforts and please pray for the people
of this tortured country.
Maureen / P.E.A.C.E.
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Bal Vikas Ashram is a rehabilitation center for children aged
8–14 who have been rescued from slavery. The Ashram organizes raids
to free children who have been taken hundreds of miles from their
home villages and sold to carpet loom owners. During 2002, the
Ashram carried out 10 raids and released 78 children.
The children they rescue are often in a miserable state: they
have been forced to weave rugs for 12–15 hours a day,
locked in, fed only what it takes to keep them alive and kept
in constant fear in order to prevent them from trying to escape.
What we need:
Chewable children's multi-vitamin tablets:
please make sure the tablets include iron, vitamin A and calcium.
A "welcome bag" for children arriving at the Ashram. If sending multiple bags, please ensure they each contain the same items:
1 T-shirt
1 pair pants
1 sweatshrit
1 8"x11" notebook (lined for writing in)
2 pencils
1 pair flipflops
1 bar of soap
The Children at the Ashram are mostly between the ages of 8-14, so please either put in clothing items (as listed above) for a small child (under 11) or an older child (over 11), and please label the bag either "larg" or "small". Children at the Ashram are from many religions so please don't include items with relgious messages.
Shipping Address:
Bal Vikas Ashram, c/o Diocesan Development and Welfare
Society, Jan Hit Sadan, Mirzapur Road, Naini, Allahabad 211008,
Uttar Pradesh, India
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Mongolia is a huge, landlocked country between Russia, China
and Kazakhstan, with a population of two and a half million people.
For seventy years, until 1990, it was a Soviet satellite state, one
of the most closed countries in the world. Unemployment in Mongolia
continues to be exceedingly high, and many families find it
difficult to meet their basic needs. The average Mongolian family
lives on an income of just $50.00 - $60.00 US dollars per month. A
large number of children are living on the streets, child labour is
a prevalent issue and child prostitution continues to exist in the
capital city, Ulaanbaatar.
The Lotus Children's
Centre houses 115 children. Our youngest child is one month old, and
our oldest, is a young adult at 20. Some of our children are
orphans, whose parents have died and who have no other family to
care for them. Others have parents who are not able to care for
them. There are various reasons for this aboandonment including
illness and severe poverty.
What we need:
Medical/hygienic:
Children's vitamins (multi's), lice shampoo, antiseptic cream and
bandages, sanitary napkins, toothbrushes
Food: dried fruits
and beans, peanut butter or other protein spread, NAN baby formula,
Nuts and dried vegetables.
School: good quality
coloured paper is still difficult to find in Mongolia, pens,
markers, various art supplies
Shipping Address:
Didi A. Kalika
P O Box 1018
Central Post Office
Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
www.lotuschild.org
email:
lotuschild@magicnet.mn
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